![]() ![]() BUT if that design has a trim at every letter, you need to add an additional 6000 stitches (50 x 120 stitches) of run time! That 5000-stitch design has a run time of 11000 stitches, a whopping 22 minutes of run time compared to the original 10!Īs you can see, every unnecessary trim has a significant impact on how long it takes your project to stitch out and even how the back of your embroidered project looks (you don’t want a bunch of random tie-out tails hanging). For example: If a few text lines consisting of 50 letters and 10 words have a stitch count of 5000 and the machine is running at 500 stitches per minute, you’d assume the designs would take 10 minutes to run. That’s why the stitch counts we see within a design are not always accurate regarding the actual time it takes to run on the machine. ![]() Then the needle moves to the next position, ties-in, and has to ramp back up to full speed. I know that may sound excessive, but if you consider that a machine is going full speed for every trim, then it has to slow down, tie-out, and activate the trimmer. This is very important from a production standpoint because it saves you a ton of time. Every unnecessary trim command within a text layout is lost production time, to the extent of 120 stitches for every trim generated on a machine, to be exact. Here are some features of ESA fonts that make them stand out from other fonts: ESA Fonts Join Closest Point to Save You Time:įonts that “join the closest point” mean that the files will not generate trims between each letter when running on the machine. Instead, they’re node-based objects built into your software that can be customized almost any way you see fit!īeing 100% object-based, they can be resized, re-shaped, and have their digitized properties altered (stitch count, underlay, stitch type, etc.) at the click of a button based on the fabric type you’ll be stitching on. Unlike stitch file fonts, ESA fonts aren’t just finished designs that have been assigned a keystroke. They are the gold standard in commercial embroidery. In-the-Hoop Projects: Zipper InsertionsĮSA fonts (Embroidery Specific Alphabets) are the most advanced and customizable type of embroidery fonts available because they are native font files.Digitizer’s Dream Course Overview & Level 1. ![]()
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